Hi Gabriella,
Sorry it’s taken a while. Briefly though.
In so much as that I have an attachment to the concept of God that I have created in my mind, yes. As I have said before gods cannot be described as objective fact because the methodology to prove objective facts does not apply to the concept of gods…
Or because there are no such things of course, but ok…
… so I think we are in agreement that defining the argument in terms of a God that is objective fact is not relevant in your discussion with me. AB might assert gods and free will as objective fact but given he has failed to come up with any of the evidence required to support a claim of objective fact, his assertions have been dismissed by many posters, but of course he is free to continue with his evangelical posts.
My point was that the word "love" is just a label attached to subjective sensations, many of which are interpreted by individuals in a way that often leads to illogical, highly dysfunctional, often self-destructive behaviour e.g. the over-indulgence of children, which could be considered as a form of emotional abuse. So it may be that the only common ground would be that "love" is a feeling of attachment.
I think the word "God" is one label attached to the abstract thought and interpretation of searches for meaning in what we observe and feel and remember, possibly through the use of autobiographical memories. It may be that you are saying you have never experienced the feeling of searching for meaning? In which case, yes we have no common ground for the sensation.
Well perhaps, but I still think there’s a category difference between “love”, “search for meaning” etc and “god”. The former category describes experiences, and moreover there’s enough common ground for we two to discuss the concepts meaningfully. Try that with the description of a (supposedly) objective fact “god” though and I have no idea at all what you mean it.
Yes but I am less concerned with the lies and more interested in the sensations they feel - the Brexit campaign seemed to have tapped into these feelings that people were unable to articulate in any kind of logical way, and this may be one of the reasons why we now have Boris Johnson in power - it seems he gave some voice to those feelings, if you believe the interviews with traditional Labour voters who voted Conservative.
The ”sensations they feel” are well and good I suppose, but I’d be more interested in the concrete than the abstract – what will the feelings of Brexit voters be when the car factory they work at closes, when their child can’t access mental health services, when class sizes grow and educational attainment dips etc?
Which does not make sense in a world where we operate using the concept of time on the assumption that everything has a beginning.
Not sure who “we” is but there are various conjectures that time’s arrow may not be straight, and may not have “begun” at all (what would be a time before time be in which whatever started it did its thing?).
It might be - it depends on how easy it is for an individual to dismiss the sensations they feel that they have interpreted into a concept that enriches and adds meaning to their life. If, as has been discussed endlessly on here, individuals cannot choose what they desire and they desire meaning, and their abstract concept of God generates the feelings of meaning that satisfy their desire, then they will be unable to come to the conclusion you suggest.
Jonathan Edwards?
I know that (many) people have huge emotional attachments to their beliefs in various gods that would be intensely painful to give up (look at the knots AB ties himself in to avoid at all costs honest engagement with the arguments that falsify him), but conceptually at least I don't see why they’d be unable to do it. You don’t have to “dismiss the sensations you feel” at all, but rather you do need to grasp that the arguments to justify the cause of those feelings are false.
Easy for me to say I know, but people can (and do) do it.